Take a look at this piece from Luke Akehurst on Labour List to see just how worried Labour is by the Green surge in opinion polls
and our party membership that has emerged recently. Every possible smear, real and
imagined, is marshalled here in an attempt to dissuade former Labour (and Lib
Dem) voters from supporting a party which offers policies that these people actually
find attractive.
Labour do have form on this of course. They put a great deal
of effort into defending Bethnal Green constituency in London in 2005, ultimately
unsuccessfully, as George Galloway took the seat for RESPECT. Labour regained
the seat in 2010 when Galloway didn’t stand, again with a massive effort on the
ground from Labour supporters. And Brighton and Hove, where Caroline Lucas won
the seat for the Greens in 2010 is now close to the top of Labour’s target
constituencies at next year’s general election, when you might have thought
they would be concentrating on fighting the Tories?
But no, this is Labour who take any threat from its left
much more seriously than the challenge from the Tories. The tactics are all too familiar as well.
I remember in the early 1990s musing to a friend of mine who was a Labour party
member, that I might vote Green (this after the Greens got 15% in the 1989
European Elections). She was quickly on the attack, telling me that the Greens
had a fascistic policy on population control. That was enough to bring me back
into the Labour fold.
When I eventually joined the Green Party (in 2006), the
first policy I checked out was indeed population. I don’t know if the policy
changed in the interim, but I was relieved to find that the policy is quite sensible now despite what Labour people were still telling me in 2006. I
have since discovered that there is a tiny grouping in the Green party which still
‘bangs on population’, but they are truly a tiny minority in the party.
Anyway, back to the piece on the Labour List. The writer just
doesn’t get it. The reason Labour are losing support to the Greens is because
the Greens have proper left wing policies and if Labour were to adopt these,
the left leaning voters would not be veering away from Labour in the direction
of the Greens.
I was heartened to read the comments section of this post
though, where this point is made by many of the contributors. Slagging off the
Greens will not help Labour and may even make matters worse. Labour abandoned
the progressive left of British politics a long time ago, and just as we saw in
Labour’s Scottish heartlands in the indy referendum, these voters now go
elsewhere, SNP and Green in Scotland, and increasingly PC in Wales and Green in England.
Bring it on, let the truth shine through.
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